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Library Trends, Volume 55
Volume 55, Number 1, Summer 2006
- Lynda M. Baker:
Introduction: Research Methods. 1-3 - Lisl Zach:
Using a Multiple-Case Studies Design to Investigate the Information-Seeking Behavior of Arts Administrators. 4-21 - Marilyn Domas White, Emily E. Marsh:
Content Analysis: A Flexible Methodology. 22-45 - Marie L. Radford:
The Critical Incident Technique and the Qualitative Evaluation of the Connecting Libraries and Schools Project. 46-64 - John M. Budd:
Discourse Analysis and the Study of Communication in LIS. 65-82 - Kirsty Williamson:
Research in Constructivist Frameworks Using Ethnographic Techniques. 83-101 - Ronald Powell:
Evaluation Research: An Overview. 102-120 - Robert V. Labaree:
Encounters with the Library: Understanding Experience Using the Life History Method. 121-139 - Susan E. Davis:
Identifying Opinion Leaders and Elites: A Longitudinal Design. 140-157 - Matthew L. Saxton:
Meta-Analysis in Library and Information Science: Method, History, and Recommendations for Reporting Research. 158-170 - Lynda M. Baker:
Observation: A Complex Research Method. 171-189 - Lynne McKechnie:
Observations of Babies and Toddlers in Library Settings. 190-201 - K. Ann McKibbon:
Systematic Reviews and Librarians. 202-215
Volume 55, Number 2, Fall 2006
- Jaime Stoltenberg:
Introduction: Geographic Information Systems and Libraries. 217-221 - Patrick Florance:
GIS Collection Development within an Academic Library. 222-234 - Patti Day, Chieko Maene:
Legal Considerations in the Dissemination of Licensed Digital Spatial Data. 236-253 - Tsering Wangyal Shawa:
Building a System to Disseminate Digital Map and Geospatial Data Online. 254-263 - Gail Steinhart:
Libraries as Distributors of Geospatial Data: Data Management Policies as Tools for Managing Partnerships. 264-284 - Steven P. Morris:
Geospatial Web Services and Geoarchiving: New Opportunities and Challenges in Geographic Information Service. 285-303 - Julie Sweetkind, Mary Lynette Larsgaard, Tracey Erwin:
Digital Preservation of Geospatial Data. 304-314 - Rhonda Houser:
Building a Library GIS Service from the Ground Up. 315-326 - Abraham Parrish:
Improving GIS Consultations: A Case Study at Yale University Library. 327-339 - Joe Aufmuth:
Centralized vs. Decentralized Systems: Academic Library Models for GIS and Remote Sensing Activities on Campus. 340-347 - Kim M. Ricker:
GIS Mentoring. 349-360
Volume 55, Number 3, Winter 2007
- W. Boyd Rayward, Christine Jenkins:
Libraries in Times of War, Revolution, and Social Change. 361-369
- Kathy Lee Peiss:
Cultural Policy in a Time of War: The American Response to Endangered Books in World War II. 370-386
- Chengzhi Wang:
Badly Wanted, but Not for Reading: The Unending Odyssey of The Complete Library of Four Treasures of the Wensu Library. 387-403 - Hilde Godelieve, Dominique De Weerdt:
The Discourse of Loss in Song Dynasty Private and Imperial Book Collecting. 404-420 - Ping Situ:
The Tianyige Library: A Symbol of the Continuity of Chinese Culture. 421-430 - Huanwen Cheng, Donald G. Davis:
Loss of a Recorded Heritage: Destruction of Chinese Books in the Peking Siege of 1900. 431-441 - Gerald S. Greenberg:
The Paris Commune of 1871 and the Bibliothèque Nationale. 442-453 - Melanie A. Kimball:
From Refuge to Risk: Public Libraries and Children in World War I. 454-463 - Debra Mitts-Smith:
L'Heure Joyeuse: Educational and Social Reform in Post-World War I Brussels. 464-473 - Alistair Black:
"Arsenals of scientific and technical information": Public Technical Libraries in Britain during and Immediately after World War I. 474-489
- Mary Niles Maack:
"I Cannot Get Along without the Books I Find Here": The American Library in Paris during the War, Occupation, and Liberation, 1939-1945. 490-512 - Miriam Intrator:
"People were literally starving for any kind of reading": The Theresienstadt Ghetto Central Library, 1942-1945. 513-522 - Nikola von Merveldt:
Books Cannot Be Killed by Fire: The German Freedom Library and the American Library of Nazi-Banned Books as Agents of Cultural Memory. 523-535 - Ilkka Mäkinen:
Libraries and Reading in Finnish Military Hospitals during the Second World War. 536-550 - Sharon Domier:
From Reading Guidance to Thought Control: Wartime Japanese Libraries. 551-569 - Tamara Shaw:
Doing Their Part: The Services of the San Diego Public Library during World War II. 570-582 - Gordon Barrick Neavill:
Publishing in Wartime: The Modern Library Series during the Second World War. 583-596 - Chris Lyons:
"Children who read good books usually behave better, and have good manners": The Founding of the Notre Dame de Grace Library for Boys and Girls, Montreal, 1943. 597-608
- Margaret Stieg Dalton:
The International Relations Office, 1956-1972. 609-622 - Jean L. Preer:
Man's Right to Knowledge: Libraries and Columbia University's 1954 Cold War BicentennialMan's Right to Knowledge: Libraries and Columbia University's 1954 Cold War Bicentennial. 623-637 - Louise S. Robbins:
Publishing American Values: The Franklin Book Programs as Cold War Cultural Diplomacy. 638-650 - Marek Sroka:
The Music Collection of the Former Prussian State Library at the Jagiellonian Library in Kraków, Poland: Past, Present, and Future Developments. 651-664 - Cheryl Knott Malone:
Unannounced and Unexpected: The Desegregation of Houston Public Library in the Early 1950s. 665-674 - Douglas Raber:
ACONDA and ANACONDA: Social Change, Social Responsibility, and Librarianship. 675-697 - Archie L. Dick:
"The books were just the props": Public Libraries and Contested Space in the Cape Flats Townships in the 1980s. 698-715 - Ellen Knutson:
New Realities: Libraries in Post-Soviet Russia. 716-729 - Nabil Al-Tikriti:
"Stuff Happens": A Brief Overview of the 2003 Destruction of Iraqi Manuscript Collections, Archives, and Libraries. 730-745
- Michele Valerie Cloonan:
The Moral Imperative to Preserve. 746-755
Volume 55, Number 4, Spring 2007
- Helen Brazier, David Owen:
Introduction. 757-759 - Gillian A. Burrington:
A User's Perspective. 760-766 - Kevin Carey:
The Opportunities and Challenges of the Digital Age: A Blind User's Perspective. 767-784 - J. Eric Davies:
An Overview of International Research into the Library and Information Needs of Visually Impaired People. 785-795 - Frank Kurt Cylke, Michael M. Moodie, Robert E. Fistick:
Serving the Blind and Physically Handicapped in the United States of America. 796-808 - David Owen:
Sharing a Vision to Improve Library Services for Visually Impaired People in the United Kingdom. 809-829 - Morayo Ibironke Atinmo:
Setting Up a Computerized Catalog and Distribution Database of Alternative Format Materials for Blind and Visually Impaired Persons in Nigeria. 830-846 - Richard N. Tucker:
Library and Resource Center Facilities for Visually and Print Impaired People in Developing Countries. 847-863 - Helen Brazier:
The Role and Activities of the IFLA Libraries for the Blind Section. 864-878 - J. W. Roos:
Libraries for the Blind as Accessible Content Publishers: Copyright and Related Issues. 879-916 - Ann Chapman:
Resource Discovery: Catalogs, Cataloging, and the User. 917-931 - Elsebeth Tank, Carsten Frederiksen:
The DAISY Standard: Entering the Global Virtual Library. 932-949 - Peter Brophy, Jenny Craven:
Web Accessibility. 950-972 - Margaret McGrory, Margaret Williams, Karen Taylor, Barbara Freeze:
The Impact of the Integrated Digital Library System on the CNIB Library. 994-1045
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